Thursday, November 22, 2012

The top 10 cities in literature

Mark Binelli is the author of the novel Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die! and the newly released Detroit City Is the Place to Be: The Afterlife of an American Metropolis, his first book of nonfiction. Born and raised in the Detroit area, he now lives in New York City.

For Publishers Weekly, he named his ten favorite cities in literature, including:
Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino

Calvino’s books were some of the first that made me want to write fiction. Much later, I mined Invisible Cities, one of his masterpieces — a dialogue between Marco Polo and Kublai Khan that’s also a series of prose poems about the metaphorical potential of the city — for the epigraph to Detroit City Is the Place to Be, Detroit being a city that’s long existed as a sort of (to borrow the apt phrasing of one headline writer) “Metaphoropolis.”
Read about another entry on the list.

Invisible Cities is one of Pat Conroy's six favorite books.

--Marshal Zeringue

What is J.T. Ellison reading?

The current featured contributor at Writers Read: J.T. Ellison, author of Edge of Black.

Her entry begins:
One of the joys of being a writer is the fact that reading is part of the job description. Right now, on the recommendation of two writer buddies, Laura Benedict and Jeff Abbott, I am reading Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking. It’s fascinating; a very frank look at how the world perceives introverts. As an introvert who is often mistaken for an extrovert, it’s heartening to see that what I’ve always worried was anti-social behavior is just...[read on]
About Edge of Black, from the publisher:
After the devastating loss of her husband and children, Dr. Samantha Owens is starting over: new city, new job, new man, new life. Before she's even unpacked her office at Georgetown University's forensic pathology department, she's called to consult on a case that's rocked the capital and the country. An unknown pathogen released into the Washington Metro has caused nationwide panic. Three people died—just three. A miracle and a puzzle…

Amid the media frenzy and Homeland Security alarm bells, Sam painstakingly dissects the lives of those three victims and makes an unsettling conclusion. This is no textbook terrorist but an assassin whose motive is deeply personal and far from understandable.

Xander Whitfield, a former army ranger and Sam's new boyfriend, knows about doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. And it's his disturbing kinship with a killer that can lead Sam to the truth…and once more into the line of fire.
Learn more about the book and author at J.T. Ellison's website and blog.

The Page 69 Test: A Deeper Darkness.

Writers Read: J.T. Ellison (April 2012).

My Book, The Movie: A Deeper Darkness.

Writers Read: J.T. Ellison.

--Marshal Zeringue

Pg. 69: Karen Engelmann's "The Stockholm Octavo"

The current feature at the Page 69 Test: The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann.

About the book, from the publisher:
Life is close to perfect for Emil Larsson, a self-satisfied bureaucrat in the Office of Customs and Excise in 1791 Stockholm. He is a true man of the Town—a drinker, card player, and contented bachelor—until one evening when Mrs. Sofia Sparrow, a fortune-teller and proprietor of an exclusive gaming parlor, shares with him a vision she has had: a golden path that will lead him to love and connection. She lays an Octavo for him, a spread of eight cards that augur the eight individuals who can help him realize this vision—if he can find them.

Emil begins his search, intrigued by the puzzle of his Octavo and the good fortune Mrs. Sparrow's vision portends. But when Mrs. Sparrow wins a mysterious folding fan in a card game, the Octavo's deeper powers are revealed. For Emil it is no longer just a game of the heart; collecting his eight is now crucial to pulling his country back from the crumbling precipice of rebellion and chaos. Set against the luminous backdrop of late eighteenth-century Stockholm, as the winds of revolution rage through the great capitals of Europe, The Stockholm Octavo brings together a collection of characters, both fictional and historical, whose lives tangle in political conspiracy, love, and magic in a breathtaking debut that will leave you spellbound.
Learn more about the book and author at Karen Engelmann's website.

Writers Read: Karen Engelmann.

The Page 69 Test: The Stockholm Octavo.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Pg. 99: Steven Strogatz's "The Joy of x"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: The Joy of X: A Guided Tour of Math, from One to Infinity by Steven Strogatz.

About the book, from the publisher:
A world-class mathematician and regular contributor to the New York Times hosts a delightful tour of the greatest ideas of math, revealing how it connects to literature, philosophy, law, medicine, art, business, even pop culture in ways we never imagined

Did O.J. do it? How should you flip your mattress to get the maximum wear out of it? How does Google search the Internet? How many people should you date before settling down? Believe it or not, math plays a crucial role in answering all of these questions and more.

Math underpins everything in the cosmos, including us, yet too few of us understand this universal language well enough to revel in its wisdom, its beauty — and its joy. This deeply enlightening, vastly entertaining volume translates math in a way that is at once intelligible and thrilling. Each trenchant chapter of The Joy of x offers an “aha!” moment, starting with why numbers are so helpful, and progressing through the wondrous truths implicit in π, the Pythagorean theorem, irrational numbers, fat tails, even the rigors and surprising charms of calculus. Showing why he has won awards as a professor at Cornell and garnered extensive praise for his articles about math for the New York Times, Strogatz presumes of his readers only curiosity and common sense. And he rewards them with clear, ingenious, and often funny explanations of the most vital and exciting principles of his discipline.

Whether you aced integral calculus or aren’t sure what an integer is, you’ll find profound wisdom and persistent delight in The Joy of x.
Learn more about the book and author at Steven Strogatz's website.

Writers Read: Steven Strogatz (August 2009).

Writers Read: Steven Strogatz (November 2012).

The Page 99 Test: The Joy of X.

--Marshal Zeringue

Five notable books on madness

Jon Ronson’s books include the New York Times bestseller The Psychopath Test, and Them: Adventures with Extremists and The Men Who Stare at Goats—both international bestsellers. His latest book is Lost at Sea.

One of his favorite books on madness, as told to The Daily Beast:
Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of the Psychopaths Among Us
by Robert Hare

For all the wider problems with labeling and checklists, I found Hare’s book incredibly instructive. His contention is that psychopaths bury their madness beneath a veneer of normality, so you need the checklist to identify them by the nuances of their behavior. I’m certain he’s right. He once said to me, “When you meet a high scoring one it’s stunning.” Recently I was interviewing a spy and he started talking about how much he enjoyed—as a schoolboy—jumping out from behind trees to hit people with bricks. I used Hare’s teachings to ask him, “Do you think empathy is a weakness?” He said, “Oh yes!”
Read about a novel on Ronson's list.

--Marshal Zeringue

R. Kent Newmyer's "The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr," the movie

Now showing at My Book, The Movie: The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr: Law, Politics, and the Character Wars of the New Nation by R. Kent Newmyer.

The entry begins:
I've been telling friends, jokingly of course, not to buy my book on the treason trial of Aaron Burr until they see the movie. But now the moment of truth has come. The action takes place in the House of Delegates in Richmond, which during the trial looked every bit like a makeshift Elizabethan theater where the lawyers and the parties in the case were almost indistinguishable from the spectators. Former Vice-president Burr is in the dock, accused of treason (without benefit of even a grand jury indictment) by President Jefferson, who undertook to micro-manage the prosecution from the White House--a fact that brought him face-to-face with his old enemy Chief Justice John Marshall who sat as trial judge. The character of the main players figured largely in the trial, so casting is crucial.

Aaron Burr: short, handsome, piercing dark eyes that captivated the women in (and out of) the courtroom. A Revolutionary war veteran: a gifted New York politician in hostile territory in Jeffersonian Virginia; a brilliant lawyer who directed his own defense; a good play actor, as he confessed, who found it easy to play the innocent victim of a vengeful president (which was easy to do since it was largely true). Burr finds it hard to contain his contempt for Jefferson, the government's lawyers, and their witnesses--and occasionally even John Marshall. Since Richard Burton is no longer with us, nor Paul Newman, and Richard...[read on]
Learn more about The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr at the Cambridge University Press website.

Kent Newmyer is Professor of Law and History at the University of Connecticut School of Law. His books include The Supreme Court Under Marshall and Taney, John Marshall & the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court, and Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story: Statesman of the Old Republic.

The Page 99 Test: The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr.

My Book, The Movie: The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

What is Melissa Hardy reading?

The current featured contributor at Writers Read: Melissa Hardy, author of The Geomancer's Compass.

Her entry begins:
I have a confession to make: these days I mostly listen to audiobooks. Because I have a long commute to work and a dog who needs running, this means I get a lot of reading in. 37 books so far this year, including David Foster Wallace’s mammoth opus Infinite Jest, which I had to read with a study guide (but mostly...[read on]
About The Geomancer's Compass, from the publisher:
This futuristic novel has all the elements YA fiction needs to draw critical attention from reviewers, and to elicit award-nominations. It is thematically interesting, culturally diverse, well-written, futuristic, and very funny.

Set in the year 2021, this fantastic YA novel explores the tension between a young woman's future building infrastructure for Augmented Reality, and the commitment she makes to her dying grandmother to honour ancient Chinese magic. The Geomancer's Compass imagines a world in the near future while exploring the Chinese immigrant experience and the expanding, elastic and shifting nature of reality.
Learn more about the book and author at Melissa Hardy's website.

Writers Read: Melissa Hardy.

--Marshal Zeringue

Pg. 99: Eric Lohr's "Russian Citizenship"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: Russian Citizenship: From Empire to Soviet Union by Eric Lohr.

About the book, from the publisher:
Russian Citizenship is the first book to trace the Russian state’s citizenship policy throughout its history. Focusing on the period from the mid-nineteenth century to the consolidation of Stalin’s power in the 1930s, Eric Lohr considers whom the state counted among its citizens and whom it took pains to exclude. His research reveals that the Russian attitude toward citizenship was less xenophobic and isolationist and more similar to European attitudes than has been previously thought—until the drive toward autarky after 1914 eventually sealed the state off and set it apart.

Drawing on untapped sources in the Russian police and foreign affairs archives, Lohr’s research is grounded in case studies of immigration, emigration, naturalization, and loss of citizenship among individuals and groups, including Jews, Muslims, Germans, and other minority populations. Lohr explores how reform of citizenship laws in the 1860s encouraged foreigners to immigrate and conduct business in Russia. For the next half century, citizenship policy was driven by attempts to modernize Russia through intensifying its interaction with the outside world. But growing suspicion toward non-Russian minorities, particularly Jews, led to a reversal of this openness during the First World War and to a Soviet regime that deprived whole categories of inhabitants of their citizenship rights.

Lohr sees these Soviet policies as dramatically divergent from longstanding Russian traditions and suggests that in order to understand the citizenship dilemmas Russia faces today—including how to manage an influx of Chinese laborers in Siberia—we must return to pre-Stalin history.
Learn more about Russian Citizenship at the Harvard University Press website.

Eric Lohr is Susan E. Lehrman Chair of Russian History and Culture at American University.

The Page 99 Test: Russian Citizenship.

--Marshal Zeringue

Five top books that have anxiety at their heart

Steven Amsterdam is the author of Things We Didn’t See Coming, which was longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and won The Age Book of the Year Award, among other honors. A native New Yorker and a nurse, he lives in Melbourne, Australia.

He discussed five notable books on worry with Daisy Banks for The Browser, including:
Lolita
by Vladimir Nabokov

Your next choice is Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov, which leads me to think women aren’t faring too well on your list.

My shelves are equally occupied by women writers, my books populated by strong and diverse characters but they didn’t come to mind for this assignment. Naturally, I worried. I contacted a friend, a professor, and one of her specialties is rape. Did she have any female writers who were anxious, or at least addressed anxiety through their work? She made a compelling case for Beatrix Potter as well as Rebecca Skloot but I had read neither. She briefly postulated that writing by women, the writing that floats to the top, may be more redemptive than the writing by men. She wasn’t sure and didn’t want to be quoted.

In any case, Lolita.

Do I need to outline the plot? There’s this guy Humbert, see, and he falls for this underage girl, Lolita. He knows it’s not OK, but that doesn’t slow him down. Hence, the worry, here in the form of obsession. He flirts with the girl’s mother just so he can linger in her tender young presence. Then, when the mother gets conveniently run over, he drives the girl around the US, pretending to be her father, so they can share motel rooms as they go. She gets away and marries and he chases her around the US some more. It’s all because of some unresolved issue he had with a childhood sweetheart that blossomed into a feverish sort of paedophaelia, as if that’s an excuse. His desire to manipulate her never stops and, maybe because his efforts are not all that successful, you stay with him even as his creepy hand inches ever further up her thigh.

(Lolita’s motivations, her actions, and her ability to survive are another thing entirely. In fact, this might be an area for a grand feminist work, in the vein of Rhys’s The Wide Sargasso Sea. Who wouldn’t read the book called Humbert? Would it be speared through by anxiety, though? I don’t think so.)

Why does this book make it on to so many lists?

What’s spectacular for me is the triumph of the humour over his loathsomeness. You can almost sympathise with his compulsive stream of thought, and if you can’t, you can at least admit to being entertained. Nabokov’s wry reading of America and of Humbert manages to overcome much of what’s repellent in the book. (For me, not my professor friend.)
Read about another novel Amsterdam tagged at The Browser.

Lolita appears on John Banville's five best list of books on early love and infatuation, Kathryn Harrison's list of favorite books with parentless protagonists, Emily Temple's list of ten of the greatest kisses in literature, John Mullan's list of ten of the best lakes in literature, Dan Vyleta's top ten list of books in second languages, Rowan Somerville's top ten list of books of good sex in fiction, Henry Sutton's top ten list of unreliable narrators, Adam Leith Gollner's top ten list of fruit scenes in literature, Laura Hird's literary top ten list, Monica Ali's ten favorite books list, Laura Lippman's 5 most important books list, Mohsin Hamid's 10 favorite books list, and Dani Shapiro's 10 favorite books list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Pg. 69: Derek Haas's "The Right Hand"

The current feature at the Page 69 Test: The Right Hand by Derek Haas.

About the book, from the publisher:
Meet Austin Clay, the CIA's best-kept secret.

There has always been a need in the spy game for operations outside the realm of legality-covert missions so black no one in the American government, and almost no one in intelligence itself, is aware of their existence. The left hand can't know what the right hand is doing.

Austin Clay is that right hand, executing missions that would be disavowed by his own government were he ever to be compromised. His team consists of only his trusted handler and himself. His missions are among the most important and dangerous in U.S. history.

Clay is sent to track down a missing American operative, a man who was captured outside of Moscow, in the Russian countryside. Soon he discovers the missing officer is only the beginning of the mission, and finds himself protecting a desperate woman who believes a mole has penetrated the top levels of the U.S. government, throwing the international balance of power into jeopardy.

With blistering pace, international intrigue, and a high-stakes plot that spans continents, THE RIGHT HAND introduces a new hero, from the novelist whose work the New York Times Book Review has proclaimed "devastatingly cool."
Learn more about the book and author at Derek Haas's website.

Haas is the co-writer of the films The Double, Wanted, and 3:10 to Yuma, and author of The Assassin Trilogy: The Silver Bear, Columbus and Dark Men.

My Book, The Movie: Dark Men.

Writers Read: Derek Haas (December 2011).

The Page 69 Test: Dark Men.

Writers Read: Derek Haas (November 2012).

The Page 69 Test: The Right Hand.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, November 19, 2012

Ten of the best Twinkies in fiction

You are what you eat, goes the old saying...so what better way for authors to round out their fictional characters than by what they eat?

When authors want to show that characters don't know or don't care about (the lack of) nutritional value of what they eat, a certain specificity about junk food choices goes a long way. If Hostess Brands really does go bust, future fast food foragers may have to reach for something other than Twinkies.

Here are ten characters at least partly defined by their attitude toward Hostess Twinkies:

(1) In Stephen King's The Stand, a virus kills off 99% of America's population. One of the survivors, Harold Lauder, driven in part by his unrequited love for Frannie, will later dispatch even more survivors with a bomb. A prelude to the later pyrotechnics:
They had a picnic lunch on the par: peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, Hostess Twinkies, and a large bottle of Coke each....

"I've been thinking about what I'm going to do," Harold said. "Don't you want the rest of that Twinkie?"

"No, I'm full."

Her Twinkie disappeared into Harold's mouth in a single bite. His belated grief hadn't affected his appetite, Frannie observed, and then decided that was a rather mean way to think.
Perhaps Harold would have had better luck making a love connection had he given more thought to wining and dining Fran. Bonus signifer: King plays off the urban legend that Twinkies, because of their synthetic ingredients and preservatives, have an extremely durable shelf life and would still be around and edible in a post-apocalyptic era.

(2) In The Bonesetter's Daughter, Amy Tan's fourth novel, Ruth looks back on her childhood and the resentment she sometimes felt at her mother LuLing's strict parenting. An instance:
Ruth had not grown up with flowers in the house. She could not remember LuLing ever buying them. She had not thought this a deprivation until the day she went grocery shopping with Auntie Gal and her cousins. At the supermarket in Saratoga, ten-year-old Ruth had watched as they dumped into the cart whatever struck their fancy at the moment, all kinds of good things Ruth was never allowed to eat: chocolate milk, doughnuts, TV dinners, ice cream sandwiches, Hostess Twinkles. Later they stopped at a little stand where Auntie Gal bought cut flowers, pink baby roses, even though nobody had died or was having a birthday.
(3) Sissy Hankshaw, the protagonist of Tom Robbins' Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, finds herself at the Rubber Rose, a beauty ranch-spa. She's happy to learn that breakfast in bed is a feature at the ranch...until she's served "decaffeinated coffee with saccharine, fresh grapefruit without sugar and a piece of Melba toast...."

But on her fifth day, breakfast is "a double-meat cheeseburger, a package of Hostess Twinkies, a cold can of Dr. Pepper and a Three Musketeers bar...." The meal has been ordered up by Bonzana Jellybean, the cowgirl who soon appears wearing "a skirt so short that if her thighs had been a clock the skirt would have been five minutes to midnight... She flashed honey thighs when she walked, her breasts bounced like dinner rolls that had gotten loaded on helium and, between red-tinged cheeks, where more baby fat was taking its time maturing, she had a little smile that could cause minerals and plastics to remember their ancient animate connections."

How better to paint a carefree character like Bonzana Jellybean than by her bouncy demeanor and loose approach to fashion and diet?

(4) Twinkies are just sort of food that folks take to a fishing camp, underscoring a break from everyday concerns about things like eating well. In David Wroblewski's The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, they also highlight the dietary straits facing a semi-starving boy and his dogs who live in the woods:
[Edgar] became an expert burglar of vacation cottages and fishing shacks. Mornings, while the campers fried bacon and flipped pancakes, he and the dogs lingered in the weeds; later, those same cabins would stand empty, ripe for plundering. He learned to enter without breaking, and always left without taking enough to be noticed. He carried few supplies, and none that would tie him down. A can opener and a jackknife and, later, when their diet made his teeth and gums feel buzzy, a toothbrush. A child’s Zebco spin-casting rod, small enough to carry through the woods. A fisherman’s satchel with a bobber and some hooks set in a piece of cardboard. With a little skill, he provided for them all-panfish, mainly, but sometimes a bass or a bullhead, too. Plenty of nights they went to sleep hungry, but seldom starving. The cabins yielded Twinkies and Suzie-Q’s and Ho Hos by the armful, deviled ham and custard pies and corn chips and peanut butter to eat straight from the jar, handfuls of Wheaties and Cap’n Crunch washed down with soda, and an endless procession of wieners and salami and sardines and Hershey bars. Occasionally he even found dog food, which the dogs gobbled from his palm like the most uncommon delicacy.
(5) Lula is introduced as a minor character working as a hooker in One For the Money, the first book of Janet Evanovich's "Stephanie Plum" series; over a dozen books into the series, Lula evolves into a file clerk and sometime partner for Stephanie. (In the big-screen adaptation of One For the Money, Lula is played by Sherri Shepherd.) In Finger Lickin' Fifteen, Stephanie introduces her sidekick: "Lula's got a plus-size personality and body, and a petite-size wardrobe." At a moment of crisis, Lulu's socioeconomic position shows through in her choice of comfort food:
"Hell yeah, I'm okay. Don't I look okay? I'm just freakin' is all. I need a doughnut or something." She went to my kitchen and started going through cabinets. "You don't got nuthin' in here. Where's your Pop-Tarts? Where's your Hostess Twinkies and shit? where's your Tastykakes? I need sugar and lard and some fried crap."
(6) Just as Twinkies are an irrational option for nutrition, so too are they a good prop to show the irrationality of much domestic discourse. In Nora Roberts' Sea Swept, adult brothers find themselves sharing housekeeping duties. When Phillip asks Cam to make a grocery run for a few items, Cam returns with more than a half-dozen loaded bags. It's not just the quantity with which Phillip has an issue:
"You bought Twinkies? Twinkies? Are you one of the people who believe that white stuff inside them is one of the four major groups?"

Cam's riposte: "Look, pal, he who goes to the store buys what he damn well pleases. That's a new rule around here."
That argument would lack the same power--both brothers have a good point, both should probably yield-- had Cam returned with, say, broccoli.

(7) Sometimes eating Twinkies signifies that a character lacks awareness of good nutrition. Sometimes it illustrates he's stoned and chooses to ignore such bourgeois preoccupations and healthy eating. And sometimes it's a way to show a brainiac's lack of concern for nutritional sustenance and proper hygiene.  From The Burning Wire by Jeffery Deaver:
He led her down more corridors and into another building. More stairs and finally they arrived at his office. She stifled a laugh at the clutter. The place was filled with computers and instruments she couldn't recognize, hundreds of bits of equipment and tools, wires, electronic components, keyboards, metal and plastic and wood items in every shape and color.

And junk food. Tons of junk food. Chips and pretzels and soda, Ding Dongs and Twinkies. And Hostess powdered sugar doughnuts, which explained the dandruff on his clothes.

"Sorry. It's the way we work in Special Projects," he said....
(8) Just because vampires don't eat doesn't mean that some of them don't obsess about their figures. Gloriana St. Clair, the center of Gerry Bartlett's Real Vampires series, was bloating when she was turned in 1604, so she can't blame Twinkies for her physique. But she does worry about the affect junk food has on her telepathic dog, Valdez. From Real Vampires Have Curves:
He sniffed his way to a bush and took care of his business. "Next gas stop, I want a bag of Cheetos and some Twinkies."

Typical. "I should get you a can of Alpo. That other stuff's bad for you." Can you believe this dog? I think he eats those things to torment me. I haven't had a bite, of food, that is, since 1604 and while I always liked my meals back then, I would have killed for something that smelled like a Cheeto.

"I ain't no ordinary dog. I'm a Labradoodle special and I got needs. You have any idea what they put in canned dog food?"

"Cheetos and Twinkies aren't--"

"So stop for a Big Mac and fries. And you owe me...."
Valdez is actually a shape-shifter and, as the series progresses, turns into an intense Latin lover type.  The Twinkies haven't hurt his physique: Bartlett imagines him portrayed in an adaptation by the very fit Hugh Jackman.

(9) "Bunny, for all his appearance of amiable, callous stability, was actually a wildly erratic character," writes Donna Tartt of one of the students at the elite liberal arts college in her The Secret History.
To the casual observer, I suppose, he seemed pretty much his jolly old self- slapping people on the back, eating Twinkies and Ho Hos in the reading room of the library and dropping crumbs all down in the bindings of his Greek books. But behind that bluff facade some distinct and rather ominous changes were taking place, changes of which I was already dimly aware but which made themselves more evident as time went on.
Is Tartt making an ironical nod at the so-called Twinkie defense, since we know from the outset of the novel that Bunny is the victim of the murder that propels the story?

(10) The Twinkie as sociocultural marker got a boost in 2002 when CNN and the New York Times let the world know that rustics down in Texas were deep-frying the snack. In Debbie Macomber's The Shop on Blossom Street (2010), the affluent Jacqueline Donovan tries to imagine why she wasn't invited to her son's wedding to his bride with the double-barreled first name:
Paul must've known she wouldn't be pleased - and he must have realized that his in-laws would be an embarrassment. She could only imagine the kind of wedding Tammie Lee's family would hold. The reception dinner would probably consist of collard greens and grits, with deep-fried Hostess Twinkies instead of wedding cake.
Redneckognize.

--Marshal Zeringue ©

Pg. 99: R. Kent Newmyer's "The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr: Law, Politics, and the Character Wars of the New Nation by R. Kent Newmyer.

About the book, from the publisher:
The Burr treason trial, one of the greatest criminal trials in American history, was significant for several reasons. The legal proceedings lasted seven months and featured some of the nation's best lawyers. It also pitted President Thomas Jefferson (who declared Burr guilty without the benefit of a trial and who masterminded the prosecution), Chief Justice John Marshall (who sat as a trial judge in the federal circuit court in Richmond), and former Vice President Aaron Burr (who was accused of planning to separate the western states from the Union) against each other. At issue, in addition to the life of Aaron Burr, were the rights of criminal defendants, the constitutional definition of treason, and the meaning of separation of powers in the Constitution. Capturing the sheer drama of the long trial, Kent Newmyer's book sheds new light on the chaotic process by which lawyers, judges, and politicians fashioned law for the new nation.
Learn more about The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr at the Cambridge University Press website.

Kent Newmyer is Professor of Law and History at the University of Connecticut School of Law. His books include The Supreme Court Under Marshall and Taney, John Marshall & the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court, and Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story: Statesman of the Old Republic.

The Page 99 Test: The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr.

--Marshal Zeringue

Penn Jillette's 6 favorite books

Penn Jillette is an author and magician. His latest book is Every Day Is an Atheist Holiday.

One of his six favorite books, as told to The Week magazine:
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman

This is the best magic book ever written. I don't think Kahneman thought he was writing a book on magic, but most magicians don't think they're studying how the brain works, so we're even. God doesn't come up in this book.
Read about another book on the list.

Thinking, Fast and Slow is one of Dylan Ratigan's six favorite books.

--Marshal Zeringue

What is Karen Engelmann reading?

The current featured contributor at Writers Read: Karen Engelmann, author of The Stockholm Octavo.

Her entry begins:
I’m a sporadic reader, which means that I may go for days or even a week without a book, take forever to finish a complex work, or devour several in a rush. It’s been a dry spell (mostly due to no electricity in the aftermath of Superstrom Sandy) but I am now a quarter into a historical novel, Noon at Tiffany’s. This just came out, and author Echo Heron is a friend whose work I admire. It is the story of Clara Wolcott Driscoll, a gifted artist working in the shadow of Louis Tiffany at the end of the 19th century. Clara’s genius becomes Tiffany’s triumph and financial success — a secret hidden until...[read on]
About the book, from the publisher:
Life is close to perfect for Emil Larsson, a self-satisfied bureaucrat in the Office of Customs and Excise in 1791 Stockholm. He is a true man of the Town—a drinker, card player, and contented bachelor—until one evening when Mrs. Sofia Sparrow, a fortune-teller and proprietor of an exclusive gaming parlor, shares with him a vision she has had: a golden path that will lead him to love and connection. She lays an Octavo for him, a spread of eight cards that augur the eight individuals who can help him realize this vision—if he can find them.

Emil begins his search, intrigued by the puzzle of his Octavo and the good fortune Mrs. Sparrow's vision portends. But when Mrs. Sparrow wins a mysterious folding fan in a card game, the Octavo's deeper powers are revealed. For Emil it is no longer just a game of the heart; collecting his eight is now crucial to pulling his country back from the crumbling precipice of rebellion and chaos. Set against the luminous backdrop of late eighteenth-century Stockholm, as the winds of revolution rage through the great capitals of Europe, The Stockholm Octavo brings together a collection of characters, both fictional and historical, whose lives tangle in political conspiracy, love, and magic in a breathtaking debut that will leave you spellbound.
Learn more about the book and author at Karen Engelmann's website.

Writers Read: Karen Engelmann.

--Marshal Zeringue

Coffee with a canine: Alison Pace & Carlie

The current featured duo at Coffee with a Canine: Alison Pace and Carlie.

The author, on how Carlie got her name:
I got Carlie when she was about a year and a half old so she already had her name. I'd spent years trying to think of the perfect dog name for when I finally got a dog but she really knew her name so I didn't want to change it. Change, as we know, can be hard, and Carlie had had a lot of it. I'm not sure how it started but...[read on]
About Alison Pace's new book, You Tell Your Dog First: from the publisher:
You Tell Your Dog First…

About the date you just had…about the questionable results of a medical test…about the good and the bad…about everything.

For years, award-winning author Alison Pace was a dog person without a dog. And then, she got Carlie—a feisty and fluffy West Highland white terrier. She could weed out bad boyfriends with a sniff of her button-black nose and win the hearts of lifelong friends with an adoring gaze. Suddenly, Alison had a constant companion and confidante, who went with her on long morning rambles in Central Park, on trips to the country and the beach, and on her search for inner peace, love, and happiness. Through Carlie, Alison found herself connected to the world as never before.

With her trademark warmth, wit and humor, Alison shares her stories…the tales of a dog person who found her dog.
Learn more about the book and author at Alison Pace's website.

Pace's novels include If Andy Warhol Had a Girlfriend, Pug Hill and its sequel, A Pug’s Tale, and City Dog. She lives in New York City.

The Page 69 Test: City Dog.

The Page 99 Test: You Tell Your Dog First.

Read--Coffee with a Canine: Alison Pace and Carlie.

--Marshal Zeringue

David Carnoy's "The Big Exit," the movie

Now showing at My Book, The Movie: The Big Exit by David Carnoy.

The entry begins:
A blogger recently asked me who I'd cast as my protagonist in the movie version of The Big Exit and I drew a blank. The truth is I didn't really have anybody in mind as I was writing the character of Richie Forman. In my first novel Knife Music, I really saw my lead, the surgeon Ted Cogan, as George Clooney or Bradley Cooper (Cooper would be my first pick today). But Forman was just Forman.

The irony is that when I was creating him I thought some big actor would want to play him, even if I didn't have one in mind. That's because he's a Sinatra impersonator and I suspect that plenty of actors would want to play Sinatra without actually playing him.

So after flailing with that first blogger, I decided to think about it some more. Luckily, of course, there's been a lot of talk about Scorsese doing a Sinatra biopic, and the Web is filled with lists of actors who might play Sinatra in that film if it ever comes to fruition.

I'm a big fan of Leonardo DiCaprio, the guy who tops most Scorsese Sinatra lists. But I think Matt...[read on]
Learn more about the book and author at David Carnoy's website.

The Page 69 Test: The Big Exit.

My Book, The Movie: The Big Exit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Pg. 99: Stephen T. Asma's "Against Fairness"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: Against Fairness by Stephen T. Asma.

About the book, from the publisher:
From the school yard to the workplace, there’s no charge more damning than “You’re being unfair!” Born out of democracy and raised in open markets, fairness has become our de facto modern creed. The very symbol of American ethics—Lady Justice—wears a blindfold as she weighs the law on her impartial scale. In our zealous pursuit of fairness, we have banished our urges to like one person more than another, one thing over another, hiding them away as dirty secrets of our humanity. In Against Fairness, polymath philosopher Stephen T. Asma drags them triumphantly back into the light. Through playful, witty, but always serious arguments and examples, he vindicates our unspoken and undeniable instinct to favor, making the case that we would all be better off if we showed our unfair tendencies a little more kindness—indeed, if we favored favoritism.

Conscious of the egalitarian feathers his argument is sure to ruffle, Asma makes his point by synthesizing a startling array of scientific findings, historical philosophies, cultural practices, analytic arguments, and a variety of personal and literary narratives to give a remarkably nuanced and thorough understanding of how fairness and favoritism fit within our moral architecture. Examining everything from the survival-enhancing biochemistry that makes our mothers love us to the motivating properties of our “affective community,” he not only shows how we favor but the reasons we should. Drawing on thinkers from Confucius to Tocqueville to Nietzsche, he reveals how we have confused fairness with more noble traits, like compassion and open-mindedness. He dismantles a number of seemingly egalitarian pursuits, from classwide Valentine’s Day cards to civil rights, to reveal the envy that lies at their hearts, going on to prove that we can still be kind to strangers, have no prejudice, and fight for equal opportunity at the same time we reserve the best of what we can offer for those dearest to us.

Fed up with the blue-ribbons-for-all absurdity of "fairness" today, and wary of the psychological paralysis it creates, Asma resets our moral compass with favoritism as its lodestar, providing a strikingly new and remarkably positive way to think through all our actions, big and small.
View the trailer for Against Fairness, and visit Stephen T. Asma's website.

The Page 99 Test: Against Fairness.

--Marshal Zeringue

Five best: notable correspondence by eminent men

Frederic Raphael is the author of more than twenty novels, including The Glittering Prizes, f ive volumes of short stories, biographies of Byron and W. Somerset Maugham, and five volumes of his personal notebooks and journals. His new books include Distant Intimacy: A Friendship in the Age of the Internet, a collection of his correspondence with Joseph Epstein.

For the Wall Street Journal he named a five best list of collections of notable correspondence by eminent men, including:
Dear Bunny, Dear Volodya
Edited by Simon Karlinsky (2001)

The letters exchanged by Vladimir Nabokov and Edmund Wilson between 1940 and 1971 begin with Wilson's helpful condescensions toward the penurious immigrant Russian writer whose first stories in English found a niche in the New Yorker. In due time, Wilson becomes "Bunny" and Nabokov "Vladimir" and then "Volodya." But, as can happen between writers, intimacy leads to envy, envy to friction. If Wilson was the panjandrum of American letters, Nabokov was the outsider who trumped the ace. Wilson could do everything except write an undoubted masterpiece. As Nabokov's genius declared itself ("Pale Fire" was loudly applauded by Wilson's ex-wife Mary McCarthy), the two men's amiable jousting turned tetchy. The friendship came to a sour conclusion when Wilson wrote a long and hostile review of Volodya's translation of Pushkin's "Eugene Onegin." Nabokov never forgave his ex-patron for presuming to teach him Russian. When I visited Nabokov in Montreux in 1970, he told me that he had received an envelope from Wilson from which there flopped a large black cut-out of a butterfly. As a tribute to Nabokov the lepidopterist, it was the nearest that Bunny ever came to an apology. Wilson enclosed a note saying how much he had enjoyed the controversy about Pushkin. Nabokov looked at me balefully. "I did not enjoy it at all." The two men never wrote to each other again.
Read about another entry on the list.

Also see Frederic Raphael's top ten talkative novels.

--Marshal Zeringue

Pg. 69: Stacey Madden's "Poison Shy"

The current feature at the Page 69 Test: Poison Shy by Stacey Madden.

About the book, from the publisher:
A dark debut from a rising literary talent

Brandon Galloway is a 29-year-old nobody, fumbling between dead-end jobs in a town full of drunks and prostitutes. When he lands a position with a pest control company and meets 21-year-old wild-child Melanie Blaxley while fumigating her apartment for bed bugs, Brandon’s life skips from hapless to hectic in no time. He is both attracted to and repelled by Melanie’s vulgar sensuality and reckless promiscuity, but when her world of crazy sex and petty crime starts to take its toll on his sanity, Brandon wonders how much more of her he can stand.

When she disappears, Brandon’s left to put the pieces together. Is it all just a prank, or have Melanie’s wild ways put her in peril? A hair-raising thrill ride through the bars and backstreets of a small college town, Poison Shy is a darkly funny and fast-paced novel about obsession, fear, and the threat of other people.
Learn more about the book and author at the publisher's website and Stacey Madden's Twitter perch.

The Page 69 Test: Poison Shy.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Pg. 99: David B. Williams's "Cairns: Messengers in Stone"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: Cairns: Messengers in Stone by David B. Williams.

About the book, from the publisher:
From meadow trails to airy mountaintops and wide open desert, cairns -- those seemingly random stacks of rocks -- are surprisingly rich in stories and meaning. For thousands of years cairns have been used by people to connect to the landscape and communicate with others, and are often an essential guide to travelers. Cairns, manmade rock piles can indicate a trail, mark a grave, serve as an altar or shrine, reveal property boundaries or sacred hunting grounds, and even predict astronomical activity. The Inuit have more than two dozen terms to describe cairns and their uses!

In Cairns: Messengers in Stone, geologist and acclaimed nature writer David B. Williams (Stories in Stone: Travels through Urban Geology) explores the history of cairns from the moors of Scotland to the peaks of the Himalaya -- where they come from, what they mean, why they’re used, how to make cairns, and more. Cairns are so much more than a random pile of rocks, knowing how to make cairns can drastically alter the meaning of the formation. Hikers, climbers, travelers, gardeners, and nature buffs alike will delight in this quirky, captivating collection of stories about cairns.
Learn more about the book and author at David B. Williams's website and blog.

The Page 99 Test: Cairns: Messengers in Stone.

--Marshal Zeringue